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Nurses' beliefs about nursing diagnosis: A study with cluster analysis
Author(s) -
D'Agostino Fabio,
Pancani Luca,
RomeroSánchez José Manuel,
LumilloGutierrez Iris,
PalomaCastro Olga,
Vellone Ercole,
Alvaro Rosaria
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/jan.13545
Subject(s) - normative , nursing diagnosis , cluster (spacecraft) , nursing , psychological intervention , population , nursing interventions classification , cluster sampling , medicine , sample (material) , cross sectional study , family medicine , psychology , medical diagnosis , environmental health , philosophy , chemistry , epistemology , pathology , chromatography , computer science , programming language
Aims To identify clusters of nurses in relation to their beliefs about nursing diagnosis among two populations (Italian and Spanish); to investigate differences among clusters of nurses in each population considering the nurses' socio‐demographic data, attitudes towards nursing diagnosis, intentions to make nursing diagnosis and actual behaviours in making nursing diagnosis.Background Nurses' beliefs concerning nursing diagnosis can influence its use in practice but this is still unclear. Design A cross‐sectional design. Methods A convenience sample of nurses in Italy and Spain was enrolled. Data were collected between 2014‐2015 using tools, that is, a socio‐demographic questionnaire and behavioural, normative and control beliefs, attitudes, intentions and behaviours scales. Results The sample included 499 nurses (272 Italians & 227 Spanish). Of these, 66.5% of the Italian and 90.7% of the Spanish sample were female. The mean age was 36.5 and 45.2 years old in the Italian and Spanish sample respectively. Six clusters of nurses were identified in Spain and four in Italy. Three clusters were similar among the two populations. Similar significant associations between age, years of work, attitudes towards nursing diagnosis, intentions to make nursing diagnosis and behaviours in making nursing diagnosis and cluster membership in each population were identified. Conclusion Belief profiles identified unique subsets of nurses that have distinct characteristics. Categorizing nurses by belief patterns may help administrators and educators to tailor interventions aimed at improving nursing diagnosis use in practice.

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